Market for Skill

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A01=Patrick Wallis
Apprentices
Artificers
Artisans
Author_Patrick Wallis
Bound
Business
Capital
Category=KCP
Category=KCZ
Category=KN
Cent
Century
Cities
Citizens
Citizenship
Connections
Contracts
Costs
Court
Craft
Economic
Economy
Eighteenth
Entry
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Families
Family
Fees
Firm
Formal
Freedom
Freeman
Freemen
Growth
Guild
Human
Human capital
Indentures
Institutions
Instruction
Journeymen
Knowledge
Labour
Labour market
Law
Legal
Market
Masters
Mobility
Numbers
Occupational
Occupations
Opportunity
Parents
Parish
Population
Premiums
Premodern
Provincial
Records
Scale
Seventeenth
Sixteenth
Skills
Sons
Statute
Substantial
Thomas
Towns
Towns cities
Trade
Urban
Wealth
Workers
Youths

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691265315
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 2025
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How apprenticeship shaped the English economy

Apprenticeship dominated training and skill formation in early modern Europe. Years spent learning from a skilled master were a nearly universal experience for young workers in crafts and trade. In England, when apprenticeship reached its peak, as many as a third of all teenage males would serve and learn as apprentices. In The Market for Skill, Patrick Wallis shows how apprenticeship helped reshape the English economy.

Some historians see apprenticeship as a key ingredient in the industrial revolution; others agree with Adam Smith in seeing it as wasteful and conservative. Wallis shows that neither of these perspectives is entirely accurate. He offers a new account of apprenticeship and the market for skill in England, analyzing the records of hundreds of thousands of individual apprentices to tell the story of how apprenticeship worked and how it contributed to the transformation of England. Wallis details the activities of apprentices and masters, the strategies of ambitious parents, the interventions of guilds and the decisions of town officials. He shows how the system of early modern apprenticeship contributed to the growth of cities, the movement of workers from farms to manufacturing and the spread of new technologies and productive knowledge.

In this groundbreaking study, Wallis argues that apprenticeship succeeded precisely because it was a flexible institution which allowed apprentices to change their minds and exit contracts early. Apprenticeship provided a vital channel for training that families could trust and that was accessible to most young people, whatever their background.

Patrick Wallis is professor of economic history at the London School of Economics and Political Science and the coeditor of Apprenticeship in Early Modern Europe.

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